42nd New Zealand Parliament

http://dbpedia.org/resource/42nd_New_Zealand_Parliament an entity of type: WikicatNewZealandParliaments

The 42nd New Zealand Parliament was a term of the New Zealand Parliament. Its composition was determined by the 1987 election, and it sat until the 1990 election. The 42nd Parliament was the second (and final) term of the controversial fourth Labour Party government. Initially, the only other party in the 42nd Parliament was the National Party, with the Democratic Party having lost the two seats it held in the 41st Parliament. Later, a dissident Labour MP, Jim Anderton, would found the NewLabour Party in 1989. Due to internal disputes within the Labour Party, there were three Prime Ministers during the 42nd Parliament: David Lange, Geoffrey Palmer, and Mike Moore. rdf:langString
rdf:langString 42nd New Zealand Parliament
xsd:integer 42
xsd:integer 1261494
xsd:integer 1106762846
xsd:integer 43
xsd:integer 41
rdf:langString Sovereign
rdf:langString File:42nd New Zealand Parliament Seating.png
xsd:gMonthDay --08-08 --09-03
xsd:integer 1987
xsd:integer 97
xsd:date 1989-12-12
xsd:date 1987-09-16
xsd:date 1990-09-06
xsd:date 1990-02-14
xsd:date 1990-09-06
xsd:date 1987-09-16
rdf:langString The 42nd New Zealand Parliament was a term of the New Zealand Parliament. Its composition was determined by the 1987 election, and it sat until the 1990 election. The 42nd Parliament was the second (and final) term of the controversial fourth Labour Party government. Initially, the only other party in the 42nd Parliament was the National Party, with the Democratic Party having lost the two seats it held in the 41st Parliament. Later, a dissident Labour MP, Jim Anderton, would found the NewLabour Party in 1989. Due to internal disputes within the Labour Party, there were three Prime Ministers during the 42nd Parliament: David Lange, Geoffrey Palmer, and Mike Moore. The 42nd Parliament consisted of ninety-seven representatives. At the time, this was the highest number of representatives that Parliament had had, although it would later be exceeded. All of these representatives were chosen by single-member geographical electorates, including four Māori electorates.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 6191

data from the linked data cloud